Abstract

Aluminum particles are extensively employed to enhance the energetic properties of propellants. However, the heat release rate (HRR) fluctuations resulting from aluminum combustion can potentially affect the stability of solid rocket motors (SRMs). Using a self-made high-pressure combustion diagnostics system and laser ignition system, this work investigates the combustion behavior of single aluminum particle under propellant atmosphere and acoustic excitation. An unsteady aluminum combustion model using Ranz-Marshall correlation and involving the heat and mass transfer equation was developed. The D2 law of aluminum particle combustion in a real propellant under 0.5 MPa was fitted as t = D2/0.31. The measured combustion rate of laser-ignited aluminum particles was found to increase from 0.381mm2/s to 0.465 mm2/s when an acoustic excitation of sine wave(200 Hz, 20Pa) was applied to the propellant, which agreed well with the prediction of the proposed unsteady combustion model whose error was 4.7%. Then, the verified correlation was included in the SRM to calculate the HRR fluctuation of the aluminum on acoustic boundary near the propellant burning surface. The effects of particle diameter, gas velocity, oscillation amplitude and frequency on the HRR fluctuation were obtained. It was found that the HRR fluctuation increases with the increasing particle diameter, gas velocity, and oscillation amplitude, and that due to the acoustic boundary effect, the HRR fluctuation is more sensitive under low-frequency oscillation. Based on the HRR fluctuation of aluminum combustion and particle damping, the growth rate of instability resulting from aluminum combustion in an SRM was investigated. The results showed that the growth rate of instability resulting from aluminum combustion were 9.38s-1 and 24.06s-1, while the particle damping (−25.8s-1) caused by combustion residuals, which suggests the aluminum particles play a critical role in SRMs combustion instability.

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